Pubdate: Sat, 01 Jul 2000 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2000 Houston Chronicle Contact: Viewpoints Editor, P.O. Box 4260 Houston, Texas 77210-4260 Fax: (713) 220-3575 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: James Pinkerton BORDER DAS GET FUNDS, BACK OFF DRUG CASE THREAT HARLINGEN -- Border prosecutors Friday backed off their threat to stop prosecuting drug cases referred by federal agencies because Texas congressional leaders came up with a last-minute appropriation of $12 million for them. District attorneys along the Texas-Mexico border had said they would no longer prosecute small drug cases referred by federal authorities after July 1. On Friday, they agreed to push that deadline back three months. The $12 million will be divided evenly among the four states that border Mexico. "What it does is give us all a little bit of breathing room," said Yolanda De Leon, Cameron County district attorney. "We will continue to do what we've been doing, but will be paid for what we do until the end of September." Most of the cases involve small drug seizures -- usually less than 50 pounds -- made at the many international bridges and Border Patrol checkpoints along the border. Border counties, some of the poorest in the state, are spending millions of dollars prosecuting the cases, according to the district attorneys. They contend that it is unfair for Washington, D.C., to place that burden on local taxpayers. "We're partners in the War on Drugs," one state prosecutor said. "But there's a difference between helping each other out and being suckers." Rene Guerra, district attorney in fast-growing Hidalgo County, called the funding "a step in the right direction." "I hope this is the beginning to a permanent solution for what the federal government does about this onslaught of drug cases on the border." A pair of drug busts on the same bridge Thursday in Hidalgo County illustrate the situation. One woman was arrested and will be prosecuted in federal court after U.S. Customs agents searched her car and found 25 pounds of cocaine with a street value of $1.1 million. But a 17-year-old Mexican woman, who had 191 pounds of marijuana in her car worth less than $200,000, was referred for prosecution in state court. In Laredo, Webb County District Attorney Joe Rubio quit accepting federal drug referrals in October 1997 after his request for financial help was turned down. Republican U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison was instrumental in getting the appropriation passed, said Cathy Travis, an aide to South Texas congressman Solomon Ortiz, D-Corpus Christi. "Mr. Ortiz has talked with a couple of DAs in Texas and they say it's good enough for a good-faith effort," Travis said. "They won't go through with their July 1 deadline, but this isn't off the table. They stressed in very strong terms this was only a 90-day reprieve." Travis said Ortiz is working to obtain permanent funding for state prosecutors in the next fiscal year, which begins in October. He also is pushing legislation to create another 13 federal courts along the Southwest border. Guerra believes the federal cases should be handled only by federal judges and prosecutors. Savvy drug lords now tailor their loads so that if caught, their couriers will get lighter sentences in state court, he said. "The traffickers now have figured out the thresholds, what is going to be referred to state court and what federal. We need to close that loophole," Guerra said. The root of the problem, De Leon said, is that funding for prosecutors has not kept pace with funding for police officers and agents. "It is a narrow perspective if they only fund law enforcement, and not the other side of the equation," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck